
Abdullah told Broadcasting Corporation: “This is like the United States actually does not understand what I do for this country. This is a betrayal.”
During the U.S. withdrawal in August 2021, he and his parents fled Afghanistan and are now an paratrooper in the U.S. military. He was worried that he could not help his sister and her husband escape, because President Donald Trump’s administrative order suspended the re -resettlement plan.
The order canceled all flights and suspended the application of Afghan refugees, and the family members of the active soldiers did not have any exemptions.
Trump believes that this decision solves the “record of immigration” and threatens “the availability of Americans.”
But Abdullah and several other Afghan refuge told Broadcasting Corporation that although they cooperated with US officials, military and non -profit organizations in Afghanistan for many years, they felt that the United States had “discarded” them. We will not use their real names because they are worried that doing so may endanger their cases or make their families dangerous.
As soon as Abdullah heard the order, he called his sister in Afghanistan. “She cried, she lost all hope,” he said. He believes that his work has made her the goal of the Taliban government in power in 2021.
“That anxiety is unimaginable. She thinks we never see each other anymore,” he said.
Abdullah said he was a U.S. military translation during the war. When he left Afghanistan, his sister and her husband failed to get a passport to board the plane in time.
The Taliban government spokesman Suhail Shaheen told BBC that anyone who cooperates with international forces will be amnesty, and all Afghanists can “live in this country without fear.” He claims that these refugees are “economic immigrants.”
However, a report from the United Nations in 2023 questioned the guarantee of the Taliban government. The investigation found that despite the implementation of amnesty, hundreds of former government officials and members of the armed forces were still killed.
Abdullah’s sister and her husband have completed the medical examination and interview required for re -settlement in the United States. BBC saw the documents approved by the US Department of Defense.
Now Abdullah said that Trump insisted that the number of immigrants was too high to become a reason for his separation from his family. He described sleeping nights and said anxiety was affecting his work in the combat forces serving the United States.
Barbaka, a former legal adviser to Afghanistan, is still hiding in Afghanistan.
“They not only violated their commitments to us, but also destroyed us,” he said.

The Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) saw the letter of the United Nations confirmed his role and a letter from the US Air Force Lieutenant Colonel supporting him for sheltering. It also added that he provided suggestions on attacks on armed elements with connected with Taliban and Islamic State.
Barbucks could not understand the president’s decision because he had fought alongside the U.S. forces. “Because of these tasks, we are in danger of life. Now we are in a serious danger,” he said.
He has been moving his wife and young son from one place to another, desperately trying to hide. He claimed that his brother was tortured because of his whereabouts. Given the nature of his statement, the Broadcasting Corporation cannot confirm this part of his story.
Barbucks called on Trump and his national security adviser Mike Waltz to change his mind.
“Mike Waltz, you are serving in Afghanistan. Please encourage the president,” he told us.
Before farewell, he added: “A beam of light we have always insisted on was extinguished.”
Ahmed managed to fly to the United States during the chaos of withdrawal, but now he has lost his family. He felt that he had no choice but to leave his father, mother and teenage brothers and sisters.
He said that if he did not cooperate with the United States with his father, his family would not be the goal of the Taliban government. “I can’t fall asleep because I know that I am one of the reasons for them to fall into this situation,” he added.
Before the Taliban took over, Ahamad worked in a non -profit organization called an open government partnership (OGP). The organization was co -founded by the United States 13 years ago and headquartered in Washington. He said that his most proud job was to establish a special court to solve the problem of abuse women.
But he claimed that his work in OGP and the advocacy of women made him goals, and in 2021, Taliban took over the country to shot by the country by the country.
The Broadcasting Corporation saw a letter from a hospital in Pennsylvania and evaluated “evidence of damage caused by bullets and bullet fragments”, which said “consistent with his description of what happened in Kabul.”

To make matters worse, he said that his family was also in danger, because his father was the colonel of the Afghan army and assisted the Central Intelligence Agency. The Broadcasting Corporation saw a certificate provided by Afghanistan National Security Force and thanked his father for his service.
Ahmed said the Taliban government harassed his parents and siblings, so they fled to Pakistan. The photos seen by the Broadcasting Corporation showed that Ahamed’s father and brother were treated in the hospital for injuries. He claimed that these injuries were caused by the Taliban government personnel.
His family has completed several steps for the resettlement plan. He said he even provided evidence to prove that he had enough funds to support his family’s life after arriving in the United States without any government help.
Ahmed now said that the situation is critical. His family’s visa holds in Pakistan will expire within a few months. He has contacted the International Immigration Organization and was informed of “patientness.”
The person in charge of the reorganized non-profit organization of Afghan refugees, which helps eligible Afghan refugees, said that he estimates that 10,000-15,000 people are in the post-stage stage of the application.
Mina, who is pregnant, has been waiting for a flight from Islamabad for six months. She was worried that her fear would threaten her unborn child. “If I lose my child, I will commit suicide,” she told Broadcasting Corporation.
She said that even if the Taliban government controlled Afghanistan, she had protested women’s rights. She claimed that she was arrested and detained overnight in 2023.
“Even so, I don’t want to leave Afghanistan. After being released, I hid, but they called me and said that they would kill me next time,” she said.
Mina was worried that the Pakistani government would send her back to Afghanistan. Part of the reason is that Pakistan will not provide asylum to Afghan refugees indefinitely.
During the decades of instability in the region, the country has received hundreds of thousands of refugees from its neighbors. According to the United Nations refugee agency, the country has accommodated 3 million Afghan nationals, of which about 1.4 million records were recorded.
With the intensification of cross -border tensions with the Taliban government, people are increasingly worried about the fate of Afghan people in Pakistan, and some reports say they have been intimidated and detained. The special reporter of the United Nations said he was worried about it, and Afghanians in the area should be better treated.
The Pakistani government said that foreigners who are illegally deported to the country are expelled back to Afghanistan and confirmed that a search operation was conducted in January.
According to the International Immigration Organization, since September 2023, more than 795,000 Afghanians have been expelled from Pakistan.
The Afghan refugees we have interviewed felt that they were in a dilemma: one was the motherland that their lives were threatened, and the other was their patience being exhausted.
They have always pinned their hopes on the United States, but this seemingly secure harbor was suddenly blocked by the new president until it was notified separately.